Panerai Stainless Steel and Alligator Leather Luminor Due Watch
Details
What's in a name? Where panerai is concerned, it holds decades of meaning. The Luminor watch refers to the luminescent compound that was patented by the Italian horologist in 1949, allowing the Italian navy - for whom its watches were made - to read the time in the darkest of sea conditions. It's this very feature that continues to define the model today; the Due sub-collection, launched in 2016, debuts a new case inspired by the lines of the classic 1950s Luminor, and yet retains the glow-in-the-dark nature to the dial's indices and hands.
Details
What's in a name? Where panerai is concerned, it holds decades of meaning. The Luminor watch refers to the luminescent compound that was patented by the Italian horologist in 1949, allowing the Italian navy - for whom its watches were made - to read the time in the darkest of sea conditions. It's this very feature that continues to define the model today; the Due sub-collection, launched in 2016, debuts a new case inspired by the lines of the classic 1950s Luminor, and yet retains the glow-in-the-dark nature to the dial's indices and hands.
What's in a name? Where panerai is concerned, it holds decades of meaning. The Luminor watch refers to the luminescent compound that was patented by the Italian horologist in 1949, allowing the Italian navy - for whom its watches were made - to read the time in the darkest of sea conditions. It's this very feature that continues to define the model today; the Due sub-collection, launched in 2016, debuts a new case inspired by the lines of the classic 1950s Luminor, and yet retains the glow-in-the-dark nature to the dial's indices and hands.